• The German wall : fallout in Europe
  • [NT 42944] Record Type: [NT 8598] Electronic resources : [NT 40817] monographic
    [NT 47348] Title Information: fallout in Europe
    [NT 47353] Alternative Intellectual Responsibility: SilbermanMarc, 1948-
    [NT 47356] Secondary Intellectual Responsibility: Palgrave Connect (Online service)
    [NT 47351] Place of Publication: New York
    [NT 47263] Published: Palgrave Macmillan;
    [NT 47352] Year of Publication: 2011
    [NT 47264] Description: 1 online resource.
    [NT 47298] Series: Studies in European culture and history
    [NT 47266] Subject: Political culture - Germany. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Mass media - Germany. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: National characteristics, German. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: National characteristics, European. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Berlin (Germany) - History -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Germany - History -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Germany - History -
    [NT 47266] Subject: Germany - Social conditions -
    [NT 47266] Subject: History. -
    [NT 47266] Subject: HISTORY - Germany. - Europe -
    [NT 47266] Subject: HISTORY - Modern -
    [NT 47266] Subject: HISTORY - Western. - Europe -
    [NT 47266] Subject: HISTORY - Social History. -
    [NT 51458] Online resource: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230118577An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click for information
    [NT 47265] Notes: Description based on print version record.
    [NT 51398] Summary: When the Berlin Wall opened unexpectedly on November 9, 1989, it marked a rupture of global significance. For Germany's national history the event has become � b6 s next to the defeat of 1945 b6 s the most significant date in collective memory. For Cold War Europe the Berlin Wall represented a symbol of border crisis and of difference and division. This interdisciplinary volume addresses multiple consequences of the fall of the Wall: looking back at the physical barrier, its demise, and how it has been mediated in film and television; detailing the processes of restoring and revitalizing the city and the country that had been torn asunder; recognizing the new challenges of integrating socially and politically old and new minorities; and identifying how a new European identity may emerge 'after the Wall.' The anthology is targeted at scholars and advanced students in history, German studies, sociology, art history, and related fields.
    [NT 50961] ISBN: 9780230118577electronic bk.
    [NT 50961] ISBN: 0230118577electronic bk.
    [NT 60779] Content Note: PART I: RE-VIEWING THE BERLIN WALL *�Germany 1989: A New Type of Revolution? /�Konrad H. Jarausch *�The Different Aesthetics of the Berlin Wall /�Olaf Briese *�Politics, Culture, and Media before and after the Berlin Wall /�Henning Wrage *�PART II: RE-NEWING BERLIN IN UNIFIED GERMANY�* Re-Capitalizing Berlin /�Janet Ward *�Interim Use at a Former Death Strip?: Art, Politics, and Urbanism at Skulpturenpark Berlin Zentrum /�Karen E. Till *�Jugendweihe: Revitalizing a Socialist Coming-of-Age Ceremony in Unified Berlin /�Barbara Wolbert * PART III: RE-SETTLING BERLIN'S OTHERS *�Neither Eastern nor Welcome: The Confused Lives of Berlin's Balkan Migrants, 1950-2000 /�Isa Blumi *�Class of 1989: Who Made Good and Who Dropped Out of German History?: Postmigrant Documentary Theater in Berlin /�Katrin Sieg * PART IV: RE-NEGOTIATING EUROPE'S CENTER *�On Italian Bridges: Navigating Rocks and Hard Places in Post-Wall Europe /�Lina Insana *�Breaking Down the Walls: The European Library Project /�B. Venkat Mani.
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